£1.75Bn funding boost for affordable housing in Scotland

The Scottish government is to allocate over £1.75Bn to councils to stimulate investment in affordable housing.

The announcement comes as newly released figures reveal the highest levels of activity in the affordable house-building sector in Scotland for over 30 years. Details have been released of each local authority’s full funding allocation for affordable housing over the next three years.

The move is designed to help local authorities and house-builders plan their investment and provide certainty on the amount of funding available until 2021.

In 2018-19, £532M will be shared amongst local authorities – increasing to £591M in 2019-20 and £630M in 2020-21.

Housing Minister Kevin Stewart said the move would help the government’s plans in delivering 50,000 affordable homes by 2021. He said: “We are ensuring Scotland has homes that are high-quality, efficient and affordable. We have recently announcing to local authorities how much money they’ll have to invest in affordable housing until the end of this Parliament. It means they can plan these new affordable homes now – with the certainty that the funding will increase year-on-year. This is also an important signal to the house-building sector in Scotland and demonstrates our commitment to the industry and the estimated 14,000 jobs our affordable housing supply programme supports each year. This will provide the certainty that local authorities and the sector need to accelerate this progress and ensure we keep up this momentum to reach our goal of 50,000 new affordable homes by 2021.”

New statistics also show a level of activity in the affordable house-building sector not seen since the early 1980s, with 10,276 affordable homes approved in 2016/17 – a 29% increase on the year before. 7,000 of these were for social rent new house building. In the same year, 9,308 affordable homes were started (an increase of 21% on 2015/16) and 7,336 were completed – up by 13%.